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Random Hacks of Kindness

Elizabeth Sabet writes "Google, Microsoft, NASA, The World Bank, and Yahoo! are unlikely partners, but they are bringing together the best and brightest in disaster relief management and the ever-growing hacker community in a progressive initiative called Random Hacks of Kindness. Its mission is to mobilize a world-wide community of technologists to solve real-world problems through technology. RHoK is gearing up for its first world-wide 'hackathon for humanity' on June 4-6, 2010. Following last year's inaugural event in Mountain View, California, which produced software solutions that were used on the ground during the devastating earthquakes in Haiti and Chile, the partners have decided to take the effort global. RHoK engages volunteer software engineers, independent hackers, and students from around the world in a marathon weekend of hacking events and coding competitions to develop software solutions for problems posed by subject-matter experts. This first global Hackathon will feature sponsored events in Washington, DC, Sydney, Nairobi, Jakarta, and Sao Paulo." Here's where to go for more details or to register for the DC event.

15 of 69 comments (clear)

  1. in other words by mxh83 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're gonna take the use the event as a front to get ideas...

  2. And how is it used? by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How is the code used though? Do you still own the code? Is it licensed under the GPL? BSD? Apache? Or is it just given to the companies or placed in the public domain?

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  3. Just make sure by fustakrakich · · Score: 2

    that none of these people can claim copyright on your work.. or any patents...

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    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:Just make sure by fustakrakich · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Jeeze! First three comments... effectively saying, "Don't feed the bears"

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:Just make sure by deniable · · Score: 4, Informative
      Exactly, from the site linked:

      At a RHoK Hackathon, benevolently-inclined hackers will listen to a keynote speech presenting the challenges we are facing. Then they’ll churn out some of the most important open source code on the planet

      Emphasis mine. I'd love to see someone try to close-source this stuff with the major players. Let's see a four-way fight between Google, Microsoft, Yahoo and the US Government. Popcorn anyone.

  4. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Who cares if they're using this awesome idea to make money after they help millions of people?

    Just because someone is going to make money off of it doesn't mean it's suddenly an evil idea.

    1. Re:So what? by T+Murphy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Uhm.. it's good versus evil- you're supposed to fight the evil. Why would anyone care about something as mundane as helping millions when you can fight evil?

    2. Re:So what? by fustakrakich · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, the problem is they could conceivably stop you from using it... Making money is not the issue...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    3. Re:So what? by Ceriel+Nosforit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      TFA:

      Random Hacks of Kindness

      Clueless:

      Is it licensed under the GPL? BSD? Apache?

      Anonymous:

      Who cares...?

      A voice of reason, thankfully.

      "The very first Crisis Camp bar camp was held in Washington, D.C. in May 2009. During one of the opening sessions of the camp an industry panel spoke, and clearly stated that some issues of global importance take precedence over competitive business concerns."
      - RHoK.Org

      --
      All rites reversed 2010
  5. Haiti Earthquake and Ushahidi by Phoenix666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was centrally involved in the Haiti earthquake relief effort. One interesting open source app we, the State Department, the UN, Red Cross, US Marines, and others used was called Ushahidi, which is a crowd-sourced news & mapping tool. Within hours of the quake the good people at Ushahidi had set up an instance to track reports and direct relief efforts at http://haiti.ushahidi.com./

    You could watch, real-time, as reports funneled into the map of people texting from inside collapsed buildings requesting evac, and see first-responders picking up on them. Once Digicel, Haiti's cellphone company, started pushing official messages about which shortcode to text help requests to, and also to distribute the locations of medical help, food, water, etc., then it really picked up steam.

    It was the first time we had all seen anything like it. The Marines told us they were using it almost like a trouble-ticket system to route their emergency teams because it was the only actionable information they could get.

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    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
    1. Re:Haiti Earthquake and Ushahidi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Both Sahana and Ushahidi are Free and Open Source projects, and like any non-profit org are always in desperate need of qualified helpers. Join the mailing lists, introduce yourself & explain what programming or other help you can bring, and I'm sure they'll point you to a list of 1000 waiting tickets in a bug tracker somewhere! It's a lot more productive use of your hobby time organizing resources & solving puzzles for real instead of sinking it into a video game ... !

      2010 Summer of Code ideas links given as those are immediate needs the communities have prioritized.

      http://www.sahanafoundation.org/
      http://wiki.sahanafoundation.org/doku.php/foundation:sahana_gsoc10

      http://www.ushahidi.com/
      http://www.ushahidi.com/dev_team
      http://wiki.ushahididev.com/
      http://swift.ushahidi.com/extend/ideas/

      fix a bug, save someone's life (or maybe 70 or 300.. it scales!) who wouldn't otherwise've made it... no joke. how often do you get that opportunity in your day to day? maybe we can't do f.all about leaking oil wells, but we do have the ability to do something here. which is pretty neat if you think about it.

  6. Africa’s Gift to Sil Valley: How to Track a by SpzToid · · Score: 4, Informative

    NY Times:

    ...an important force behind this upheaval is a small Kenyan-born organization called Ushahidi, which has become a hero of the Haitian and Chilean earthquakes and which may have something larger to tell us about the future of humanitarianism, innovation and the nature of what we label as truth.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/weekinreview/14giridharadas.html

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    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
  7. Hack for Life by oldhack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I most heartily approve.

    And I hope there are many interesting results, other than buncha nerdy half-assed bullshit software projects. There are a lot more out there in life in need and want.

    Build a better water pump. Build a better wiring harness. Things people in need can use.

    And for god's sake, stop wasting your good brains cooking up another social network bullshit. You young people can do way way better than that.

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  8. Re:If You Build It by value_added · · Score: 3, Informative

    And I hope there are many interesting results, other than buncha nerdy half-assed bullshit software projects. There are a lot more out there in life in need and want. Build a better water pump. Build a better wiring harness. Things people in need can use.

    Like this pump?

    Here's an excerpt:

    For 15 years, Kevin Costner has been overseeing the construction of oil separation machines to prepare for the possibility of another disaster of the magnitude of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill.

    Disturbed by the effects of the Valdez spill in Alaska, Mr. Costner bought the nascent technology from the government in 1995 and put $24 million of his own money into developing it for the private sector.

    Kevin saw the Exxon Valdez spill, and as a fisherman and an environmentalist, it just stuck in his craw, the fact that we didn't have separation technology, said John Houghtaling, Mr. Costner's lawyer and business partner as chief executive with Ocean Therapy Solutions, which developed the technology.

    On Wednesday, BP's chief operating officer, Doug Suttles, said that the company had approved six of Ocean Therapy's 32 machines for testing. All boast centrifuge processing technology giant vacuum-like machines that suck oil from water, separate the oil, store it in a tanker and send the water, 99.9 percent purified, back into the gulf.

    The technology was available for use 10 years ago, Mr. Houghtaling said. "These machines have been very robust, but nobody's been interested in them until now," he added.

    He said that the largest four machines have the capability of separating 210,000 gallons of oil from water a day, 200 gallons a minute.

    Sounds like the quintessential hacker.

    And for god's sake, stop wasting your good brains cooking up another social network bullshit. You young people can do way way better than that.

    Kostner's efforts are the product of fifteen years work and $24 spare cash. And on a somewhat related note, the special submarines that James Cameron wants to contribute, those were financed courtesy of the movie studios. The point here is that it's hard to avoid the fact that the alternative (working on some possibly useless social networking thing) looks a lot more attractive. And do-able.

  9. Like RHoS? by w0mprat · · Score: 2, Funny

    Random Hacks of Sedition. RHoS is so masterful I see they've hacked most printing companies that make labels for consumer electronics!

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